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Hardcover The Confidante: Condoleezza Rice and the Creation of the Bush Legacy Book

ISBN: 031236380X

ISBN13: 9780312363802

The Confidante: Condoleezza Rice and the Creation of the Bush Legacy

Glenn Kessler paints a revealing portrait of Condoleezza Rice as a woman and as an unstoppable political force. A critical examination of her skills as policy-maker, politician and manager, 'The... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Five Stars

I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I'd say it's essential reading for anyone who follows current events on any level. The writing is both direct and engaging and the author provides background and context in each chapter without overcomplicating. I really felt like a Washington insider with access to fascinating accounts of behind-the-scenes negotiations. Kessler's treatment of Rice is even-handed; he highlights her dedication, drive, poise and intelligence but also holds her accountable for failed outcomes and missteps. Reading the New York Times is a whole new experience now - I have a much deeper understanding of the issues and people in the news. Highly recommended!

A fascinating read!

Never much one for politics, I began reading this book only because my father was reading it and had vehemently recommended it to me. However, upon picking it up and reading just a few short pages, I was hooked. The book provides a riveting portrait of one of the most important women, no, one of the most important people in our country. Rice was once believed to have had a substantial chance of becoming the first female president, but lost that chance through foolish political choices. This book shows Rice's weaknesses and her strengths, and portrays her admirable if not greatly successful attempts to fix her mistakes. The insider point of view Kessler offers as a journalist who followed Rice closely provides a wonderful personal touch to the examination of her character, and, in some ways, despite her controversial choices, one cannot help but admire her core of steel and her keen intelligence and sarcastic wit.

A Seat at the Diplomatic Table

Kessler's thesis is two-fold: (1) Rice has spent her years as Secretary of State saddled with the impossible task of trying to undo the damage that she did in Bush's first term as a National Security Advisor who fell under the sway of the administration's neoconservative ideologues. (2) Despite keeping up the most frenetic travel schedule of any Secretary of State since Kissinger, Rice's performance has been a series of missed opportunities attributable to a lack of any coherent strategic vision. As a reporter "on the plane" with Rice, Kessler is able to give you a detailed and psychologically nuanced look at Rice and the other players, foreign and domestic. It is a finely observed rendition of a disaster in the making, made all the more poignant by the fact that Rice herself is portrayed as a brilliant, talented, strong, energetic, attractive, and even charismatic person who might have played a constructive role in the world had she attached herself to a more competent mentor. As a reporter, Kessler stops short of articulating what he thinks an appropriate foreign-policy agenda might have looked like and tends to judge Rice's performance in relation to the goals that the she and the Administration set for themselves. But the book's agnosticism is part of its attraction, as it gets you thinking about your own foreign-policy values and commitments. What would a good response to the Hezbollah-Israeli war have looked like? What role should democracy and human rights play in foreign policy--and does an excessive focus on those values make a country end up looking hypocritical as idealism comes into contact with reality and inevitably becomes compromised? When is refusing to negotiate directly with a dangerous outlaw state like North Korea a useful tool, and when does it become an impediment to achieving important goals, like nuclear nonproliferation? Kessler's book doesn't answer these questions, but raises them in such an intriguing way as to ensure that it will still be attracting readers long after Rice has left the public stage--whenever that may be.

Compelling and revealing -- a must read

Kessler immediately draws you in with his vivid portrait of Rice, her tenure in the Bush administration, and the implications of her actions on our future. I'm not a foreign policy maven but I couldn't put it down...Kessler's writing is always engaging, thoughtful, and clear. He creates a fascinating portrait of Rice and how she maneuvers among personalities and powermongers around the world. As she changes from realpolitiker to Bush acolyte, Kessler evenhandedly presents both her flaws and her successes. This is a must read...her actions affect us all!

A GREAT READ - AND AN IMPORTANT BOOK

I got this book because I heard the author on NPR and then read a feature about the book on Slate Magazine, showing how Rice used a PR machine to transform her image. But even then, the book was an unexpected experience. It works on so many levels -- it is a biography, it is a foreign policy primer and it is also a journalistic memoir. I don't follow the ins and outs of foreign policy, and yet Kessler writes in such a fluid and easy to understand manner that I never felt lost as Rice flies around the globe. Kessler is balanced but tough in his assessment of the Secretary of State, and he covers all of the top foreign policy issues. This book helped me understand Condoleezza Rice -- and also what has happened to America's standing in the world, and why.
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